Search

So, Hillary has released 11K pages worth of schedules from her time as First Lady. I’m going to pass on reading or sorting through them.

I just don’t care.

But a lot of folks in the blogosphere are making a big deal out of the fact that Hillary Clinton was “somewhere” in the White House on the infamous day that her husband left a little mess on a certain in tern’s blue sweater.

Which I could care even less about than almost anything else revealed in her schedule.

As Gina Cobb points out,  the White House “is not exactly a 1000 square-foot bungalo.”

Pointing this out and then pointing and laughing at Hillary about her husband’s moral failings really isn’t fair at this point. There are a lot of other legitimate criticisms of Hillary Clinton; this isn’t one of them.

2 Responses to “Hillary Releases First Lady Schedules”

Bravo. That puts you on a higher moral plane than ABC, for instance.

I can’t wait for the day that political discourse isn’t refereed by middle schoolers.

Brian Ross spent many days in October, 2001 screeching on every ABC News show he could get on that government tests showed that the anthrax sent to U.S. political and media figures was linked to Saddam Hussein’s biological weapons program. That was a lie from the start; no tests ever revealed any such thing. His sources told him that because they wanted him to do just what he did — create the perception in the public’s mind that Iraq was behind the anthrax attacks. When that turned out to be false, he never retracted it, and, to this day, refuses to reveal who his sources were who fed him that extremely consequential lie.

Ross is, however, very much on top of sniffing out whether Hillary slept with Bill on the day he received oral sex from Monica Lewinksy. The minute he got his hands on Hillary’s schedule today, he apparently crawled right over to that most special media day ever — Stained Blue Dress Day — and excitedly connected the dots. The byline on the story is “BRIAN ROSS and the ABC NEWS INVESTIGATIVE UNIT.” It apparently took the entire ABC Investigative Journalist team to uncover this story. Given what an honest, law-abiding and open administration we have, it’s not as though investigative journalists have anything else to do.

Got something you want to say?

Quicktags:


Notes:

You have 10 minutes after you submit your comment to edit it. Simply click the E(dit) link above the countdown-counter at the bottom of your comment. You can only edit a comment from the same IP address from where the original comment was submitted.

If your comment does not appear immediately, it has been sent to the moderation queue for approval.

Your comment either contained more than 2 hyperlinks, or it used a word(s) that are on my Spam blacklist. Comments awaiting moderation will usually be approved within a day.

And, being that it's my blog and all...I reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time.